Many users who purchase Microsoft Office LTSC Professional Plus 2024 expect Outlook to allow unrestricted email sending. When Outlook suddenly blocks outgoing messages or displays a daily sending limit warning, it feels like a licensing problem.

It isn’t. Office LTSC does not control how many emails you can send. The limit always comes from the email service connected to Outlook.
Office LTSC is a one-time, perpetual license for desktop applications. Outlook is included only as an email client, not as an email server. Every message you send passes through the email provider you configured, and that provider enforces the sending rules.
What Actually Controls Email Sending Limits in Office LTSC 2024
The daily sending limit depends entirely on the email account added to Outlook. Different providers apply different policies, even though Outlook itself looks the same.
Example:
- Gmail – typically allows up to 500 recipients per day on free accounts, with stricter limits if bulk behavior is detected
- Outlook.com – uses dynamic thresholds that change based on sending behavior
- Custom domain or ISP email accounts – often limited to 200–500 emails per day on shared hosting
Buying Office LTSC does not increase or remove these limits.
Why Outlook Can Block Emails Below 500 Messages in Office LTSC 2024
A common assumption is that staying under 500 emails prevents restrictions. Modern email systems do not work that way. Providers analyze behavior, not just volume.
Restrictions may trigger if Outlook activity shows signs such as:
- Rapid sending within a short time window
- Repeated or identical message content
- Large BCC recipient lists
- Emails sent mostly to new or unverified contacts
- High bounce or rejection rates
Spam protection systems act automatically and may apply temporary blocks without advance notice.
Office LTSC vs Exchange: The Key Difference
This is where most confusion starts.
Office LTSC does not include Exchange Online or Microsoft-hosted email services. Microsoft licenses Office LTSC strictly as a per-device desktop application, completely separate from any email hosting or sending infrastructure.
Microsoft’s official Office LTSC licensing guidance confirms that LTSC licenses provide desktop application rights only and do not include email hosting, SMTP services, or sending capabilities. Outlook in LTSC functions purely as a client, while all email sending limits are enforced by the connected email provider.
Only subscription plans such as Microsoft 365 Business include Exchange mailboxes with higher daily sending limits.
How to Identify Email Sending Limits in Outlook for Office LTSC 2024
You can confirm the source of the limit directly inside Outlook.
Check the following:
- Open File → Account Settings → Email Accounts
- Review the account type listed under your email address
If it shows Gmail, Outlook.com, POP, IMAP, or Exchange, that service defines your sending quota.
How to Reduce or Avoid Email Sending Limits
If you do not want to change email providers, adjusting sending behavior often prevents restrictions.
Best practices include:
- Sending emails in smaller batches instead of large bursts
- Pausing several minutes between groups of messages
- Avoiding large BCC lists
- Personalizing message content when possible
- Removing invalid or inactive email addresses
These steps reduce the likelihood of automated throttling.
When to Upgrade from Office LTSC 2024 for Higher Email Limits
If you send business-critical or high-volume emails regularly, upgrading is often the correct solution.
Consider switching when you:
- Communicate daily with many clients or partners
- Send internal company announcements
- Need predictable sending limits and compliance
For newsletters or marketing campaigns, a dedicated email service is the correct approach rather than Outlook.
Office LTSC Standard vs Professional Plus (Does It Affect Email Limits?)
Microsoft offers Office LTSC in multiple editions through different commercial licensing programs. These differences often confuse users into thinking one edition provides higher email sending limits. The table below clarifies what actually changes—and what does not.
| Feature / Aspect | Office LTSC Standard 2024 | Office LTSC Professional Plus 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Target audience | Small businesses, general use | Enterprises, education, large organizations |
| Licensing availability | Broad commercial availability | Restricted to enterprise agreements |
| Licensing programs | Microsoft Customer Agreement, Open Value | Open Value (Org-wide), MPSA, EA, Education |
| Outlook included | Yes | Yes |
| Email server included | No | No |
| Exchange Online included | No | No |
| Email sending limits | Controlled by email provider | Controlled by email provider |
| Difference in email limits | No difference | No difference |
Note:
Even though Professional Plus has stricter enterprise licensing requirements, both LTSC editions behave identically for email sending.
Email providers enforce daily sending limits to protect server reputation and prevent abuse. Allowing unrestricted sending would quickly lead to spam blacklisting, which would block legitimate emails for everyone.
Once you identify the provider and adjust your sending method—or upgrade to the appropriate service—the issue usually resolves without changing your Office license.
